E Papa Waiari

http://dbpedia.org/resource/E_Papa_Waiari an entity of type: Thing

"E Papa Waiari" (English: "Oh, Uncle Waiari"), also known as "E Papa Wairangi" is a traditional Māori song, often used in tītī tōrea, a type of (skill and dexterity game) played by passing tītī (40-60cm long sticks) while seated, in time to a rhythmic song. rdf:langString
rdf:langString E Papa Waiari
rdf:langString E Papa
rdf:langString E Papa
xsd:integer 69275684
xsd:integer 1106815448
rdf:langString Pātea Māori Club featuring Dalvanius
rdf:langString PMC - E Papa.jpg
rdf:langString *Māori music *Pacific reggae *Reggae-pop
rdf:langString Maui Records
<second> 210.0
rdf:langString Give Them Life
xsd:integer 1985
xsd:integer 1984
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dalvanius Prime
rdf:langString February 1985
rdf:langString Mascot Recording Studios, Auckland.
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString "E Papa Waiari" (English: "Oh, Uncle Waiari"), also known as "E Papa Wairangi" is a traditional Māori song, often used in tītī tōrea, a type of (skill and dexterity game) played by passing tītī (40-60cm long sticks) while seated, in time to a rhythmic song. The song became a staple for Māori musicians to record, including St Joseph's Māori Girls' College Choir Turakina Maori Girls' College Choir in the 1960s. In 1985, the Pātea Māori Club released the song as a reggae pop single, and the New Zealand band Herbs recorded the song as the opening track to their album Sensitive to a Smile in (1987), also in a reggae style.
<minute> 3.5
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8169
xsd:double 210.0

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